Launched in 2007, Nickelodeon’s iCarly was a landmark show for the millennial and Gen Z generations. It was one of the first children’s sitcoms to fully integrate the concept of user-generated web content into its narrative, predicting the rise of YouTube influencers. However, as streaming rights shift between Paramount+, Netflix, and other platforms, the show has become fragmented. This paper examines the role of Archive.org (the Wayback Machine and its media collection) in preserving iCarly not just as a television product, but as a piece of digital culture.
iCarly and the Digital Archive: How a 2000s Sitcom Found a Second Life on Archive.org icarly archive.org
Unlike broadcast television, which left physical copies (tapes) or scheduled reruns, the streaming era relies on licensing. When a show like iCarly is removed from a service for tax write-offs or licensing disputes, it can vanish from legal access overnight. Archive.org, a non-profit digital library, fills this gap by hosting user-uploaded media, including complete episodes, webisodes (the in-show "Random Dancing" clips), and promotional material. This creates a "shadow archive" that ensures the show remains accessible to researchers and nostalgic viewers. Launched in 2007, Nickelodeon’s iCarly was a landmark
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